FEATURE : Taiwanese taking to Indian culture after hit movie

Taiwanese women wearing saris pose with an Indian man in Taipei’s Ximending shopping district before going to see an Indian movie on March 22.

PHOTO: CNA

Although the finer details of Indian culture can make many Taiwanese feel all at sea, there seems to be an undertow that is attracting people toward the South Asian country.

This is evident not only from the sold-out screenings of the award-winning hit movie Slumdog Millionaire, but also from the packed Bollywood dance classes, yoga classes and the growing market for Indian clothes and accessories.

Slumdog Millionaire, which swept this year’s Oscars with eight awards and warmed hearts with its rags-to-riches story, turned the eyes of the world toward social issues in India.

It has also fueled a craze in many countries for Indian music and dance, as well as other aspects of Indian culture.

The question of whether the movie presents an accurate portrait of India has been discussed at length in the international media and elsewhere.

But for people in Taiwan who already feel some degree of affinity for India, the movie serves as a point of reference and a touchstone of Indian culture.

In Taipei, an Indian accessories store called Rana Legend in the Ximending area is a popular gathering point for Indian culture enthusiasts.

On the day this reporter visited the store, a dozen women dressed in saris and wearing exotic bangles, earrings, necklaces and bindis were preparing to hit the streets. Their mission was to wear their Indian outfits to the movie theater where they were going to see the Bollywood movie Taare Zameen Par (Stars on Earth).

The group, which included a civil servant, a student, a school nurse and a housewife, said that what they loved was the profundity and richness of Indian culture.

Candy Sun, who teaches Bollywood dance to more than 500 students at community schools and sports centers, said that she could sense a growing interest in Indian culture as more and more women, and even some men, were taking her classes.

Sun said that destiny took her to India five years ago to learn Indian dance and she fell in love with the country for no discernible reason.

“I can feel it in my blood,” said Sun, who at first was a belly dance instructor. “I learned Hindi really fast and I can identify with everything in India.”

Sun said her strong feelings for India were later explained to her by a guru whom she met during a pilgrimage to an upstream area of the River Ganges. Sun said the guru told her that in one of her previous lives she was Indian.

And “you knew that yourself,” she said she was told.

Another of the women in the group, Lu Li-huei, said that she has visited the subcontinent five times and every time she goes to India, she finds the country even more fun and the culture even more diverse than she had imagined.

“To gain a good understanding of India, you have to make personal contact with it,” said Lu, a civil servant at the Ministry of Transportation and Communications’ Civil Aeronautics Administration, who practices yoga and has learned Indian dance.

She admitted, however, that she found it hard to identify with some aspects of the culture, such as the caste system.

“As an outsider visiting the country, I can only look at the culture from the perspective of an observer,” she said.

The movie Slumdog Millionaire epitomizes the poverty in the Indian slums, Lu said.

“However, it is a movie with a conveniently fluid notion of reality and it does not reproduce how shocked and upset I was when I personally saw children competing with dogs for food in a filthy and stinking dump,” she said.